伯克利苏打税投票的选择效应与异质性需求反应

Selection Effects and Heterogeneous Demand Responses to the Berkeley Soda Tax Vote

American Journal of Agricultural Economics · 2017
被引 62
人大 AABS 3

中文导读

研究发现伯克利苏打税对不同消费群体的影响存在异质性,高消费家庭价格敏感度低且出现逆反效应,部分抵消了减税目标。

Abstract

Abstract Early evidence from household‐level surveys suggests that the one‐cent‐per‐ounce tax on sugar‐sweetened beverages that took effect on March 1, 2015, in Berkeley, California, has decreased consumption of sugar‐sweetened beverages dramatically. Even if these findings are robust, the public policy implications of expanding the Berkeley soda tax policy to a national level are complicated by selection effects inherent in the populations of both voters and consumers. We find that consumption responses related to the tax interact nontrivially with consumer heterogeneity. Some of these responses directly counter the public policy goals of a soda tax. For example, high‐consuming households are less price sensitive and therefore less responsive to price changes following a tax. Further, “reactance” among high‐consuming populations led to increases in soda consumption immediately following the passage of the tax, partially mitigating reductions in soda consumption.

含糖饮料税消费者异质性选择效应价格敏感度